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A Ghost Story for Christmas
S9.E1
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IMDbPro

Lot No. 249

  • Episode aired Dec 24, 2023
  • 29m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Kit Harington, Freddie Fox, and Colin Ryan in Lot No. 249 (2023)
DramaFantasyHorrorMysteryThriller

Follows a group of Oxford students, one of them becomes the collegiate talk of the town by conducting study into the mysteries of Ancient Egypt. Can the horrible sack of bones known as Lot N... Read allFollows a group of Oxford students, one of them becomes the collegiate talk of the town by conducting study into the mysteries of Ancient Egypt. Can the horrible sack of bones known as Lot No. 249 come to life thanks to these experiments?Follows a group of Oxford students, one of them becomes the collegiate talk of the town by conducting study into the mysteries of Ancient Egypt. Can the horrible sack of bones known as Lot No. 249 come to life thanks to these experiments?

  • Director
    • Mark Gatiss
  • Writers
    • Arthur Conan Doyle
    • Mark Gatiss
  • Stars
    • Kit Harington
    • Freddie Fox
    • Colin Ryan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mark Gatiss
    • Writers
      • Arthur Conan Doyle
      • Mark Gatiss
    • Stars
      • Kit Harington
      • Freddie Fox
      • Colin Ryan
    • 27User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Top cast8

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    Kit Harington
    Kit Harington
    • Abercrombie Smith
    Freddie Fox
    Freddie Fox
    • Edward Bellingham
    Colin Ryan
    Colin Ryan
    • Monkhouse Lee
    John Heffernan
    John Heffernan
    • The Friend
    Andrew Horton
    Andrew Horton
    • Long Norton
    Jonathan Rigby
    Jonathan Rigby
    • Styles
    James Swanton
    James Swanton
    • The Mummy
    Jon Dear
    Jon Dear
    • Shadowy Other
    • Director
      • Mark Gatiss
    • Writers
      • Arthur Conan Doyle
      • Mark Gatiss
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    5.91K
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    Featured reviews

    aardvarktheape

    Hollywood did it better

    A young college student buys a mummy that he brings to life to do his bidding.

    I haven't read the short story, but I had seen this adapted before as a segment of "Tales from the Darkside: The Movie" with Christian Slater and then-unknowns Steve Buscemi and Julianne Moore. I'm guessing Hollywood took some creative liberties -- but the BBC version did too, dragging in Sherlock Holmes and making a lead character gay.

    Harrington is way too old to be playing a college student (I thought he was a professor at first), the characters are all utterly one-dimensional, the motivation for the mummy-attacks are murky at best, and most importantly, there were zero scares. The performances weren't bad given what they had to work with, and there's a nice British atmosphere, but generally it was flat and unmemorable. Plus, the Holmes cameo was absolutely pointless. That's a shame, I really wanted to like this.

    As soon as I finished, I rewatched the "Darkside" segment, which I hadn't seen in over 30 years (it left a lasting impression though). The story is a little different, being relocated to the USA circa 1990, but it has everything that this version is lacking: strong characterizations, a clear motive, tension, and scares. The twist ending is equally corny, but at least it's logical, and it even runs a few minutes shorter than the BBC's adaptation.
    6210west

    Handsome old-fashioned setting, nice decor and costumes, but...

    But honestly, aside from the decor and the resulting atmosphere, what a waste of half an hour! The story is downright simple-minded, like something a schoolboy horror fan would dream up, with no attempt to make it more believable or to explain why any of the characters behave as they do. And in the end you're left saying, "Wait. You mean, that's IT? That's all there IS?? Where's the story?"

    I should add that "Oxford," as depicted in this little tale, seems to be -- even in an age before electricity -- a place badly in need of lights, since virtually all the rooms and corridors we see are shrouded in darkness.
    7Sleepin_Dragon

    Revenge of The Mummy.

    Is it possible that a mummy, known only as lot number 249, is responsible for a series of misdemeanors at an Oxford College.

    They chose a great story, suitably macabre, Conan Doyle perhaps inspired by Britain's fascination with Ancient Egypt, and all of the discoveries. Who knows what films and stories were inspired by this.

    This was pretty good, more a ghost story, less of a horror, the latter could have been ramped up a little bit. Atmospheric enough, and considering the thirty minute run time, they managed to tell the story

    I've read that this may well be the final Ghost story from Mark Gatiss, which is a shame, when they've been good, they've been enjoyable, this was one of the better recent offerings.

    As you'd expect from this series, it looks great, and was well acted, Kit Harrington was excellent, great actor, Freddie Fox also impressed.

    7/10.
    8michael-1151

    Bump in the Night

    I prefer ghost stories to horror films, there again, I have a soft spot for Frankenstein and Dracula, they'd have made a great gay couple, had there been different social mores and literary convergence when they were written.

    This relatively short piece, from the pen and lens of Mark Gatiss is suitably dark and scary, it contains significant Sherlock Holmes associations and unsurprisingly originated from the quill pen of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

    Kit Harrington (Smith) a very Victorian pre-Raiders of the Lost Ark hero, with no significant buckle to swash, bangs on the door (supposedly of Holmes before Baker Street), scared stiff, having apparently been followed by an Egyptian Mummy - Lot 249 in an auction - which Bellingham, a foppish student played by Freddie Fox as well as a modest suburb in Lewisham, London, seems intent on bringing to life.

    We see the prequel from several weeks before, depicting how this arose.

    The scaredy-cat student living in adjacent rooms in the Hallowed Courtyards of Oxford almost drowned, apparently pushed into the river by the Mummy, who does seem intent on causing havoc - primarily at the instigation of Bellingham. Why he should be so obsessed by Egyptology or wish to bring a 40 century old Mummy to life is not made clear, but Conan Doyle was writing at a time of heightened interest in Sphinxes, Pyramids and Mummies.

    Gatiss creates a great atmosphere with several dark (both visual and narrative) scenes.

    My one objection is the lack of character in the Mummy. King Kong - as different to this as chalk and cheese - nevertheless, a figure who caused fear and panic, did show emotion, bathos, pathos - even affection. With the long history of Egypt, this Mummy might have shown some character, not necessarily doing The Times crossword, but at least discovering the intricacies of Rubik's cube. Why he wanted to terrorise upstanding students in Oxford is unclear.

    Ghosts do not have to be bad, although, like politicians and realtors, they generally get a bad press.

    This was a charming, scary enjoyable vignette - but I suggest Mummy's form a Union to protect their reputations. They can't all be bad.
    7Prismark10

    Lot No. 249

    Mark Gatiss should be applauded for keeping the BBC Christmas ghost story tradition going in a time of budget cuts. I fear that this might be the last for some years by the BBC.

    At least Gatiss has skated around the low budget by gathering a classy guest cast in this short story by Arthur Conan Doyle.

    Medical student Smith (Kit Harington) gets involved with unearthly happenings at his Oxford college.

    A foreign student Monkhouse Lee nearly ended up dead. He had fallen out with fellow student Bellingham (Freddie Fox.) The louche Bellingham is an expert on Egyptology. He is in possession of a creepy mummified body and a strange Egyptian manuscript that he obtained from an auction.

    Smith decides to confront Bellingham and get him to end his revenge on those who have crossed him.

    It is not quite a mummy story, although a shadowy mummy coming to life is heavily implied.

    It really harks back to the 1970s BBC ghost stories strand. There is plenty of atmosphere, although Gatiss cannot avoid putty a naughty easter egg with a teasing Sherlock Holmes mash up.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      When 'The Friend' says, "I stand flat-footed upon the ground... No ghosts need apply," this refers to what Sherlock Holmes said in the story The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire, where a man consults Holmes because he fears his own wife may be a vampire, and Holmes endeavours to show that there is a natural explanation for the wife's behaviour.
    • Connections
      Version of Tales from the Darkside: The Movie (1990)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 24, 2023 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Номер 249
    • Filming locations
      • Rothamsted Manor, West Common, Harpenden, Hertfordshire, England, UK(Old College, Oxford)
    • Production company
      • Adorable Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 29m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.00 : 1

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